Some women will have fetal malposition during pregnancy, and the position of the fetus will also affect whether or not they can have a normal delivery, and there are several ways to correct the fetal position: first, the knee-chest position, where the pregnant woman kneels down on the bed, with her two legs separated to a shoulder-width apart, and then her hands are pressed against the bed to keep her chest and shoulders close to the bed surface, which is also a relatively common method of correcting the fetus, and it can be performed two to three times a day. Secondly, you can use external inversion, an operation in which the obstetrician rotates the fetus forward or backward with his hands by applying pressure to the pregnant woman’s abdomen to change it from breech or transverse position to cephalic position.